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/* Copyright 2004 The Apache Software Foundation
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
XMLBeans Development Kit Version 3.1.0
Welcome to XMLBeans!
Kit contents:
(1) One copy of xbean.jar, which contains XMLBeans.
Should work on any JDK 1.6.x or newer.
./lib/xbean.jar
(2) One copy of resolver.jar from Apache xml-commons. See scomp
documentation for when it is needed.
./lib/resolver.jar
(3) License information for XML Beans and included libraries
./LICENSE.txt
./NOTICE.txt
(4) One folder full of command-line scripts, pointing to the
useful main() functions in the JAR.
./bin
(5) A copy of the plain javadoc tree for org.apache.xmlbeans.*
./docs/javadocs
(6) A preliminary collection of nicely formatted user-level
documentation HTML
./docs/guide
(7) Samples that show the use of the XMLBeans API. (You'll
also find more samples at the XMLBeans web site.)
./samples
Where to start?
(1) Setup.
1. Make sure you have a JDK 1.6.x or later installed; that
java[.exe] is on your path and that JAVA_HOME/bin contains
java[.exe], javac[.exe], and jar[.exe].
2. Set your XMLBEANS_HOME env variable to point to the directory
in which you installed XmlBeans (i.e., /home/user/xmlbeans).
3. Put the scripts in ./bin on your path.
4. To test your setup, run "scomp" with no arguments. You should
get a "usage" message.
(2) Get to know XMLBeans basics.
1. Use the tutorial located at the XMLBeans web site:
http://xmlbeans.apache.org/documentation/tutorial_getstarted.html.
This provides a hands-on introduction to the most commonly
used technologies in XMLBeans.
2. For an even shorter introduction, see the Getting Started topic
included with the release (./docs/guide/conGettingStartedwithXMLBeans.html)
or at the web site
(http://xmlbeans.apache.org/docs/2.2.0/guide/conGettingStartedwithXMLBeans.html).
3. Explore the samples provided with the release (./samples) or
at the XMLBeans web site (http://xmlbeans.apache.org/samples/index.html).
(3) Get more XMLBeans depth by compiling other schemas to understand
and use generate Java types.
* In the ./schemas directory you'll find some collections of
schemas you can try out.
- easypo: a contrived simple starter "purchase order"
- nameworld: another simple schema
- numerals: schema illustrating the use of various flavors
of XmlSchema simple types
- s4s: the Schema for Schema and Schema for XML
To compile them, you can just send the whole directory to
scomp, "scomp samples", or compile each file individually,
"cd samples"; then "scomp easypo.xsd".
You will get an "xmltypes.jar" out that contains all the
compiled XMLBeans. To pick your own JAR filename just say
scomp -out myeasypo.jar easypo.xsd
* Especially as you get started, you will want to see the
.java source code for the generated code. To get that,
use a command-line like
scomp -src mysrcdir -out myeasypo.jar easypo.xsd
The "mysrcdir" will contain all the .java source code
for the generated XMLBeans.
* You can also use the XMLBean Ant task to compile your schemas
during your build process:
<taskdef name="xmlbean"
classname="org.apache.xmlbeans.impl.tool.XMLBean"
classpath="path/to/xbean.jar:path/to/jsr173_1.0_api.jar" />
<xmlbean schemas="easypo.xsd" destfile="myeasypo.jar"
classpath="path/to/xbean.jar:path/to/jsr173_1.0_api.jar" />
For more information, see docs/guide/antXmlbean.html.
(4) Learn more about code generated from your schema and about
the XMLBeans API.
Armed with the XMLBeans source code and the basic
docs, you're ready to program. Things you need to know:
* The org.apache.xmlbeans package has all the public classes
for XMLBeans. Programs should not need to call anything
else in xbean.jar directly.
* XmlObject is the base class for all XMLBeans. It
corresponds to xs:anyType.
* Every schema type corresponds to an XMLBean interface,
e.g., XmlAnySimpleType corresponds to xs:anySimpleType, and
XmlInt corresponds to xs:int, etc.. And of course this
extends to the XMLBean classes compiled from user-defined
schemas.
* Every XMLBean interface has an inner Factory class for
creating or parsing instances, e.g., to load a file of
generic type, use XmlObject.Factory.parse(myfile); to
parse a string you expect to be a purchase-order, use
PurchaseOrderDocument.Factory.parse("<ep:purchase-o...");
* XmlCursor is the API for full XML infoset treewalking.
It is obtained via xmlobject.newCursor(). Using it is
less convenient, but faster than using XML Objects,
because it does not create objects as it traverses
the XML tree.
* SchemaType is the basic "schema reflection" API (just like
Class, but for Schema). Get the actual schema type of any
instance by saying "xobj.schemaType();" get the static
constant schema type corresponding to any XMLBean class
by saying "MyPurchaseOrder.type" or "XmlInt.type".
(Analogous to "obj.getClass()" and "Object.class".)
* A number of utility methods are available on
org.apache.xmlbeans.XmlBeans, including a function that can be
used to determine whether a Java class is an XmlBean and
functions to manage runtime-loading of schema type
systems or programmatically compiling Schema files.
With that, you're ready to navigate the Javadoc and play
with the code. Also, try reading some of our
docs that are included in ./docs, as well as samples included
in ./samples
(5) Try some of the other utilities included in the ./bin directory;
you can also see a few examples of XMLBean techniques in their
source code.
* "xpretty instance.xml" pretty-prints an XML instance
document.
The code is in (available via source SVN access)
org.apache.xmlbeans.impl.tool.PrettyPrinter and is
a reasonable example of how to load and save out an
arbitrary XML document. XmlOptions are used to produce
the pretty-printing.
* "validate instance.xml schema.xsd" will validate the
instance against the schema. XMLBeans is intended to
be a very accurate XML schema validator.
The code is in (available via source SVN access)
org.apache.xmlbeans.impl.tool.InstanceValidator.
It is an excellent example of how to load a schema
type system dynamically at runtime, load and validate
an instance within that type system, and how to obtain
lists of and locations for validation errors.
* "xsdtree easypo" will show the inheritance hierarchy
of the schema types in that directory.
The code is in xml.apache.org.tool.TypeHierarchyPrinter
and is a good introduction to how to traverse the
metadata in a schema type system.
* "dumpxsb xbean.jar" or "dumpxsb myfile.xsb" will dump
the contents of "xsb" (binary schema metadata) files
in a human-readable form. These .xsb files contain
the compiled metadata resulting from the .xsd files
of a type system. They are analogous to .class files
for .java.
* "inst2xsd mydoc.xml" will generate a [set of] XmlSchema
file based on the instance document provided. This is
useful as a starting point in authoring an XmlSchema
document.
* "xsd2inst schema.xsd -name root" will generate a
sample xml document with root "root", based on the
schema definitions from the provided file.
The code is in (available via source SVN access)
org.apache.xmlbeans.impl.xsd2inst.SampleXmlUtil and is
a great example of how to combine the XmlCursor and
SchemaType APIs to create a full [sub]document
that includes required children, default values, etc.